CLEVELAND, Ohio -- A draft where the Browns end up with Sammy Watkins and Teddy Bridgewater?

I never would have guessed that was possible, and I'm not suggesting it will happen.

But respected NFL writer Pat Kirwan of CBSSports.com put out a mock draft with Watkins and Bridgewater wearing orange helmets.

A former NFL scout and executive, here is how Kirwan projects the top picks:

1. Jadeveon Clowney (DE) to Houston.

2. Greg Robinson (OT) to St. Louis.

3. Johnny Manziel (QB) to Jacksonville.

4. Sammy Watkins (WR) to the Browns.

5. Blake Bortles (QB) to Oakland.

He has Khalil Mack (a player that I believe the Browns really like) falling to Buffalo at No. 9.

Let's say that the first three picks go as Kirwan predicts -- what should the Browns do?

They would be in the excellent position of deciding between Watkins, Mack and two quarterbacks (Blake Bortles and Bridgewater).

And if they wanted to trade that pick, they'd have several quarterback-starved teams interested.

Kirwan's theory is that a well-known quarterback drops in the draft nearly every year.

He believes it could be Bridgewater.

I have doubts, because it's hard to believe so many teams would hold a bad pro day against him. It's also possible that the pro day problems have caused teams to study his tape more critically, and hold his slender (6-foot-2, 210-pound) build as a major negative.

Imagine Sammy Watkins joining the Browns group of receivers.AP

Here's what Kirwan wrote: "Cleveland knew either Bridgewater or (Fresno's Derek) Carr would fall to this spot and they would have their QB. The Browns may feel Carr has a better arm for their winter woes on the lake, but Bridgewater is a bargain at this point to some. I might wait and take (LSU's Zach) Mettenberger in the second round."

So how would you feel if the Browns draft began with Watkins and Bridgewater?

I'd love it.

I'd also be willing to deal that No. 4 pick to drop down a few spots if it meant that I could take receiver Mike Evans.

A draft of Evans and Bridgewater also is exciting.

A word of caution.

I was fired up in 2012 when the Browns picked Trent Richardson and Brandon Weeden in the first round. I was convinced Richardson would be a terrific pro. As for Weeden, I was hopeful -- mostly because he was billed as a big, strong guy with a powerful arm.

And that was true. Weeden looked physically like a quarterback. But he had major troubles with pressure and a poor touch on short passes.

That was a draft where the sizzle was much better than the double-cheeseburger.

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